How  works
 works
The bubble chamber, invented by Donald Glaser in 1952, consists of a tank of unstable
  (superheated) transparent liquid – for example, hydrogen or a mixture
  of neon and hydrogen at a temperature of about 30K. This liquid is very sensitive
  to the passage of charged particles, which initiate boiling as a result of
  the energy they deposit by ionizing the atoms as they force their way through
  the liquid.
Briefly, the bubble chamber works as follows:
  -  
      The liquid (these figures are for a roughly 2:1 neon-hydrogen mix) is prepared
    and held under a pressure of about 5 atmospheres (1atm=105 Pa).
-  Just before the beam arrives from the accelerator, the pressure is reduced
    to about 2 atmospheres making the liquid superheated.
-  As charged beam particles pass through the liquid they deposit energy
  by ionising atoms and this causes the liquid to boil along their paths.
-  
      Some beam particles may also collide with an atomic nucleus – this
        is what we want to study - and the charged particle products of such interactions
    also ionise the liquid causing trails of bubbles to form.
-  The bubbles formed are allowed to grow for a few ms, and when they have
    reached a diameter of about 1 mm, a flash photograph is taken (on several views
    so
    as to enable the interactions to be reconstructed in 3-dimensions).
-  The pressure is then increased again to clear the bubbles and await the
      arrival of the next burst of beam particles.
The time between bursts varied from about
      a second in some chambers to about a minute in others; so an experiment
  needing hundreds of thousands of interactions
      could take many months. 
 
More on the  BC history
    >